"You can almost look at the same thing as Pete Rose," Rice said on a conference call arranged by the Hall of Fame. "I think if they did something wrong to enhance the game of baseball or go against the game of baseball, they shouldn't be in. That's just me."

Regarding steroids, Rice said of the players already enshrined, "You didn't find anything that they did wrong. They're in the Hall of Fame. All of a sudden, you pick someone who did something wrong, and they say, 'Well, we're going to overlook that because he was a Hall of Famer before that.' Nah. Uh-uh. I don't believe in that. If you're going to be that way, you've got to be straight with everyone."

Both Bonds, a seven-time MVP, and Clemens, a seven-time Cy Young Award winner, elevated their games in their late 30s and early 40s and are targets of federal investigations into whether they lied about using steroids. Both were considered Hall of Fame worthy before their first link to performance-enhancing drugs.

"If they used steroids, it's up to the writers to make the decision. As Hall of Famers, we have no vote," Rice said. "You go back and ask, 'Was he a Hall of Famer before they caught him using steroids?' So you're telling your kids, 'Hey, you can use steroids now, don't get caught.' "

Several Hall of Famers have expressed disapproval of players with steroid ties, including last year's inductee, Rich Gossage, who encouraged users to fess up for the good of the game.

"As far as being accepted," Rice said, "those guys have to be accepted by the guys in the Hall of Fame right now."